70 
SOUTHEEN CULTIVATOB 
TOBIN’S GARDEN. 
M KS. jane TOBIN would inf im lie pub ic that her Garden 
stil kept up, and that no pains or expense will be spared to 
keep t' e best slock of PLANTS and BULBS in the South. 
llai'ins' procu ed the servi.es of Mr. S.sxi)Eus, an experienced 
r ovist an I a u^ serynaan, she hopes, by moderate pi ices and strkt 
attention, to obtain a > hare of publ c patronage. 
AVe are now well stock^-d, and off.rfor sale a va’-iety of EA'ER- 
GREEN TREES and SHRUBS, () namentai Flowering SHRUBS. A full 
assortment of Everblooming ROSES includ ng the newest; Double 
DAHLI-AS, hyacinths, 1 ULBS &c. Also, a col ection > f GREEN 
HOUSE PLAN I S, desirable for this latitude, and BORDER PLANTS, 
kept in Pots, &c. _ _ 
FRUIT TREES.- APPLES, PEARS, CHERRIES, PLUMS, PEACH- 
ES, APRICOTS, QUINCES, POMEGRANATE.', GRAPES and 
STRAWBERRY PLANTS, < f all the best varieties. 
13^ Naming, packing, shipping and transpoiting careful’y at- 
tended to. 
We do earnestly impress upon purchasers that a small plant es- 
tablished in a pot'is mneh better for transpoiting than a plant from 
the gr und, whatever may be its size. 
The public a e respectfully invited to visit our Rose grounds, par- 
ticularly in May and October, where we wi 1 be happy to show that 
we possess and h.ave f >r sale every article we publish, and more in 
reserve not fuPy proven. 
When selections are left to us by purchasers, they may rely upon 
receiving liberal treatment in choice of sorts with distinctive charac- 
ters. Address JANE TOBIN, 
Jan56— tf ^ ugusta, Ga. 
NEW “HORSE-POWER” FOR FARMERS AND 
MECHANICS ! 
THE VERMONT WIND-MILL. 
•* Blow winds and crack your cheeks ; rage blow.” — Aiwtfir Lea/r. 
W IND is at once powerful, inexpenssive and blows everywhere. 
Just the thing for Farmers and Meehan. cs ; just the thing for 
ft thousand uses; to pind grain, paints, apples; tj turn lathes 
p-indstones, scour, polish, cut, saw, in the high lofts of buildings, 
over city and country, on meuntains, in villages and on praiiies. 
To work on marble, cut sla'e, straw, thresh grain, and pump wtaer 
!br railroad stations, for stock, for household u-e, fountains, pond-', 
jkc. — to drain land, and to do the wook of millions of muscles every- 
where. The VERMONT WIND-MILL will do all this and more. It 
will adjust its own sails to the wind, is ample st ong, cheap and dur- 
able, beautiful in theory, certain in action. Manufactured by the 
Inventor’s Manufacturing Company. 
AGENTS WANTED for the sale of this new motive-power. 
Town, Country and State Rights for sale. Addre s 
FOWLER & WELLS, 
JanfG- 2t 808 Broadway, New York. 
ROWE S PRIZE CRUSHING MILL. 
IMPROVED AND REPATENTED— PRICE GREATLY 
REDUCED. 
T his is the only Mill that can do the work of a farm or plantation, 
and for cheapness, siin lici y, durability and efficiency in 
varied ai d useful application fir Fanning Minii g and mechanical 
purposes it is wholly without competition. T‘- »- 4 Hrrse Mill will 
crush and mix tnoroughly bushels of e irs of uns lUcked corn (dry, 
of c lur.so,) in each hour < f running time. With this I can pulverize 
20 pounds of Straw, ^heaf 0 Rs or Hay. i» nd then throw in Turnip-.-, 
Betts, Potatoes, or Pumpkins, and mix the whole perfectly. It 
mixes articl s that can mixed in no other way. Two active hands 
can gr ind 3 tons of rock plaster, as fine as any mill, in 10 hours. 
W’e cruth and sift. Tne same hands and team, in the same time, 
can crush lOKi pounds cf bones to a. merchantab e fineness. They 
can crush IS bushe s of fresh shell lime, for manure, in each hour of 
running time. I can beat any mil! extant crushing bark for tan- 
ning. This mill will out last (crushing bushel for bush 1, U'n for ton, 
horse-powtv 'or horse power) 2^ of any other mills now known as 
Crashers This m il ra-akes a fair article of family mea’. 'ihnmili 
fuini.'hes its own horse-p -wer, rrad will be shij ped to < ider for $130 
down t ) 4120, according to size — 4, 2 and 1 Horse Mills. 
For furthei- pa- liculars address the patentee, until the I't Febra- 
ary, 1856 at Richmond, Va., after that, at Tampa Bay, Fla. Ihe 
patentee guarantees every Mill he or his Agents putsup to perform 
»p to the letter of this advertisement, or no sale. 
JaS. ROWE, Patentee, 
Jan56 2t Tampa Bay, Fla. 
“ AUGUSTA SEED STORE. 
{Nearly opposite the United States and Glebe Hotels.') 
T he Subscriber has received and will continue to receive through- 
out the season, bis s ock of fresh and genuine GARDEN SEEDS, 
erop of 1855. The usual deduction made to Country Merchants. 
J. H. SERVICE. 
N. B.— GIANT ASPARAGUS ROOTS, White and Red ONION 
SET.-!, White and Red CLOVER, LUCEREE, Kentucky BLUE 
GRASS, TIMOTHY, OSAGE ORANGE, &c., &c., and a few Choice 
Double HYACINTHS. Jan56— 8t 
SOU! HERN CULTIVATOR FOR 1854. 
B ound volumes of the SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR for 1854 
may no-w be obtained at this office. Price, ^1.50. Or we 
will send it by maO, post-paid at $1.80. Address 
WM. S. JONES, Augusta, Ga. 
TtlE HOR'nCULlURISr AND JOURNAL OF 
RURAL ART AND RURAL TASTE. 
C ommenced by a. j. Dowmng, author of ‘-Lan scape Garvlen- 
ing,” “Designs for Cottage Residences,” “Frui's and Pi uit Trees 
of America,” “Coun'ry Houses, ’ etc. Edited by J. Jay Smith, 
Editor of ihe Ifortti Arnencan Sylva. 
This popular publication, which is gradually extending its influ- 
ence throughout the country, and is becoming indispensab e to the 
tasteful gard‘ ner, ihe f. u 1 culturis', and the floriculturist, will be 
continueii under the t d torship of .1. Jay Smith, whose ability and 
tas'ei’i ma'tersof country life are highly appreciated liuoughout 
the countiy. 
The cultivation of the beautiful both in Nature and Art, is justly 
esteemed an impo- tant element in education, and commends itself to 
t he attention cf all who wish to make tbei dwelling and grounds at- 
tractive, and to suriound themselves with those luxuries and adorn- 
men-s that sprivgf om the fruitful bosom < f the eaith when culti- 
vated by the practical hand. The typographical execution of the 
Horticulturist is designed lo be an index to its conten.s — neat, 
chaste and elegant. It embraces within its scope — 
I. The Description and Cultivation of Fruit and Fruit Trees — 
a subject of vast importance and in which we are already more in- 
terested than ar y other people. 
II. The Description and Cultivation of Flowers and Flowerkc 
Plants and Shrubs, from the most delicate and tender to the most 
hardy and robust. 
III. To the Delcription and Cui tivation of all Edhile Plants, 
which are, or should be, g own in our gardens, 
IV. To Gardening AS AN Art of Taste — with Designs for Orna- 
mental or La- dscape Gardening. 
V, To Rural Architecture— embracingDeBigns for Rural Cottages 
and Villas, Farm Houses, Lodges, Gates, Vineries, Ice Houses, &c. 
VI To Arboriculture— or the Planting and Culture of Forest and 
Ornamental Trees. 
VII. 'I o Botany and Entomology— bo far as these branches are 
connected with the general snlyects to which the work is specially de- 
voted 
The extpnd<?d and valuable correspondence of the HorticuUuri^ 
presents the experience of the most i^-telligent cultivators in Ameri- 
ca; the superior illustrations, and the instructive and agreeable 
articles from the pens of the editor and contributors, make it eagei ly 
sought aft'r by even the general reader interesied in country life. 
To all persons alive to the improvem< nt of their gardens, orchards, 
or country seats — 'o scientific and practical cultivators of the soil — 
to nurserymen and commercial gardeners, this journal, giving the 
latest discoveries and improvements, experiments and acquisitions 
in Horticultuie and those branches ofknowle 'ge connected with it, 
will be invaluable. 
Anew voInme(nth year) commences with the Janua'-y number 
for 1856; and it will be the constant aim i f the editor and the pub- 
lisher, by every means in their power, *o rerder it still more worthy, by 
every practicable improvement, of the liberal patronage it is receiving. 
The work is issued on the first of each month, in the be-t sti !e of 
the ! eriodical press, e cb number coi taining 48 pages, embellished 
with a frontisp eceand sever-.l otherorig nal and well-executed en- 
gravings. At the end f the year it will make a v lume of six hun- 
dred pages, beautifully illustrated with over 100 engravings, many of 
them dra Tilings of fruits and fl wers from nature. These volumes, if 
t'lken for a number of years, will make a valuable Encyclopedia of 
H 'iticultu al Literature. 
Terms— Two dollars a year — Four copies for Six dollars, payable 
in advance. 
.An I'dition is published with plates, colored in the best style of the 
art — Pr ice, Five Dollars. 
|^"A11 subscriptions must be addressed the Agents, or to 
ROBERT PEARSALL SMITH, 
Jan56 — ff I'^’and 19 Minor st., Pliiladelpbia, Pa, 
THE BEST WORK ON THE HORSE. 
PRICE ONE DOLLAR. 
C M SAXTON & CO., New York have just published, and will 
e send i', free of postage, THE STABLE BOOK ; a Treatise on tha 
Management of H oses, in relation to Stabling, Grooinmg. Feeding, 
Watering, and Working, by Jolui Stewart, A’eterinary Surge' n, and 
Professor of Vet<u-inary Medicines in the Ander^on^an University, 
Hlasgow, with Notes and Additions adapting i-' to Amcican Food 
and climate, by A. B. Allen, Edi or of ihe American Agricult urisi^ 
illustrated with numerous engr vings. 
CONTENTS. 
Chap. I.— Stabling, Const uction of Stables, Ventilation of Stables, 
’ ppendages of Stables. 
Chap. U. — Stable Operatir^ns, Stable Men, Groi'ming Operations 
of I'ec rrat'oii. Management of 'he Feet, Cperatii ns n the Stable. 
Chap. III.— Stable Restraints, Accidents, Habits, Vices. 
Chap. IV.— Warmth. 
Chap. V. — Food — Articles of, Composition of, Prepara'ion of. As- 
similation of. Indigestion < f- Principles of Feeding, Practice of Feed- 
ing. Pasturing, Soiling, Feeding at Straw Yard. 
Chap. VI. — Water. 
Chap. VIL— Service, General Preparation for Work, Physiology of 
Muscular Exertion. Preparation for Fast Work, Treatment after 
Work, Accidents of Work, Repose. 
Chap. VIII. - Management of Diseased and Defective Horses, Medi- 
cal Attendance. 
“I have aimed in this work to make Practice th“ Master of Theory, 
and have endeavored to arrange the whole subject into divisiona 
which will render every part of it easily understood, and easily re- 
ferri^d to • y ev^ry one.” — Author's Preface 
THE HORSE’S FOOT, AND HOW TO KFEP IT SOU>D, with 
illusrtatior s, by William Miles. Price— paper— Twenty-Five Cents, 
and sent free of postage. C. M. SAXTON & CO., 
Jan56— tf Agricultural Book Publishers, New York. 
